New Spanish Books: The online guide of titles from Spanish publishers and literary agents with rights for translation in the UK. To consult titles available in other markets please click on the above links.
European economies, in contrast to that of the United States, are in general characterised by less flexibility and a greater emphasis placed on institutional aspects. As for the labour market, in Europe Keynsian-inspired models have been developed based on the interaction of two groups of agents of market power: workers who determine salaries and businesspeople who determine prices.
Physical activity for the elderly is an outstanding, even strategic issue, both from a personal, individual point of view as well as from a global vision of society.
A mythological story about the origin of the Mediterranean, a tale about the link between the countries touched by this sea, a journey through the imaginary cities that hug its coasts and the spirit of their inhabitants, both those who may have lived there in the past and those who live there today.
The study of the brain has produced spectacular results in recent years but this knowledge has been applied more in medicine than at school, in the education of our children. This is not sensible.
Life aboard a merchant ship exhibits peculiar sociological connotations. The ship is the seafarer's workplace, but it is also the place to rest, enjoy free time and relate to other individuals.
The lengthy poem 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner' exalts the Romantic movement of the end of the eighteenth century. It was composed following a meditative walk through the port of Watchet on the Bristol Channel and based on a dream about a ghost ship crewed by lost souls that one of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's friends had shared with him.
Information Technology is a new profession, not always properly understood. Whether students, buyers or managers of technology, we should ask ourselves if we have grasped what we are dealing with here.
We attempt to explain, from a provocative and unconventional point of view, what this job involves, and invite you to consider all its complexities.
On her deathbed, María Francisca, member of a noble family of Toledo, begs for her children. The tension is enormous: no one present is aware that the young woman had progeny. Her mother denies the fact, but her aunts cannot but think that there may be some truth in it.